1.Experimental study on the antibacterial effect of origanum volatile oil on dysentery bacilli in vivo and in vitro.
Fang, LIAO ; Qinghua, HUANG ; Zhende, YANG ; Hanlin, XU ; Qinhua, GAO
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2004;24(4):400-3
To observe the germistatic and germicidal effects of origanum volatile oil (OVI) on the dysentery bacteria, the abdominal cavity of mice was infected with Shigella sonne (Sh. sonnei) and Shigella flexneri (Sh. flexneri) F2a. After OVI was given to the mice via gastric lavage, the effects of OVI on the infected mice were observed. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) and minimal bactericidal concentration (MBC) for dysentery bacteria were determined in vitro. The results showed that origanum volatile oil showed obvious protective effect on mice infected with Sh. sonnei and Sh. flexneri F2a and it had germistatic and germicidal effects on dysentry bacteria. We are led to conclude that origanum volatile oil is an effective medicine against the infection of dysentery bacteria.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/*pharmacology
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Dysentery, Bacillary/*microbiology
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Microbial Sensitivity Tests
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Oils, Volatile/*pharmacology
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Shigella flexneri/*drug effects
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Shigella flexneri/isolation & purification
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Shigella sonnei/*drug effects
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Shigella sonnei/isolation & purification
2.Detection and drug resistance analysis of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases-producing Shigella in pediatric patients.
Wen-jing JI ; Xi-wei XU ; Fang DONG
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2010;48(8):617-620
OBJECTIVETo investigate the occurrence and drug resistance of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs)-producing strains of Shigella in pediatric patients, so as to provide information for clinical treatment.
METHODA total of 59 strains of Shigella were isolated from stool specimens of hospitalized children with shigellosis from January 2004 to December 2008. The broth dilution test recommended by Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) was performed to detect the ESBLs producers. Susceptibility test was carried out by agar dilution method. Escherichia coli ATCC25922 and Klebsiella pneumonia ATCC700603 were used as quality control strains.
RESULTOf the 59 isolates, 21 (35.6%) strains were identified as ESBLs producers. All of the 21 strains were detected by cefotaxime and cefotaxime/clavulanic acid, only 5 (23.8%) were detected by ceftazidime and ceftazidime/clavulanic acid. Both ESBLs and non-ESBLs producers showed high resistance to penicillins. The resistance of ESBLs-producing strains to third and fourth-generation cephalosporins, aztreonam was significantly higher than that of non-ESBLs-producing strains, as well as sulphonamides and quinolones. The drugs sensitive to ESBLs producers were imipenem, meropenem, piperacillin/tazobactam, cefoperazone/sulbactam and cefoxitin, with resistance rate of 0.0%, 0.0%, 14.3%, 9.5%, 14.3%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONThe prevalence of ESBLs-producing Shigella in pediatric patients is at a high level in this area, and the enzyme-producing strains are multidrug resistant. It is recommended that the detection of ESBLs in Shigella should be carried out by microbiological laboratories. Any of the above 5 antibiotics of low resistance should be used according to the patient's condition.
Child ; Feces ; microbiology ; Humans ; Microbial Sensitivity Tests ; Shigella ; Shigella dysenteriae ; drug effects ; isolation & purification ; beta-Lactam Resistance
4.Surveillance of Antimicrobial Susceptibility Patterns among Shigella Species Isolated in China during the 7-Year Period of 2005-2011.
Haifei YANG ; Guosheng CHEN ; Yulin ZHU ; Yanyan LIU ; Jun CHENG ; Lifen HU ; Ying YE ; Jiabin LI
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2013;33(2):111-115
BACKGROUND: Shigella is a frequent cause of bacterial dysentery in the developing world. Treatment with antibiotics is recommended for shigellosis, but the options are limited due to globally emerging resistance. This study was conducted to determine the frequency and pattern of antimicrobial susceptibility of Shigella in China. METHODS: We studied the antimicrobial resistance profiles of 308 Shigella spp. strains (260 S. flexneri, 40 S. sonnei, 5 S. boydii, and 3 S. dysenteriae) isolated from fecal samples of patients (age, from 3 months to 92 yr) presenting with diarrhea in different districts of Anhui, China. The antimicrobial resistance of strains was determined by the agar dilution method according to the CSLI guidelines. RESULTS: The most common serogroup in the Shigella isolates was S. flexneri (n=260, 84.4%), followed by S. sonnei (n=40, 13.0%). The highest resistance rate was found for nalidixic acid (96.4%), followed by ampicillin (93.2%), tetracycline (90.9%), and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (80.8%). Among the isolates tested, 280 (91.0%) were multidrug resistant (resistant to > or =2 agents). The most common resistance pattern was the combination of ampicillin, tetracycline, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (70.8%). Resistance to ampicillin and tetracycline were more common among S. flexneri than among S. sonnei isolates. CONCLUSIONS: S. flexneri is predominant in Anhui, China, and its higher antimicrobial resistance rate compared with that of S. sonnei is a cause for concern. Continuous monitoring of resistance patterns is necessary to control the spread of resistance in Shigella. The recommendations for antimicrobial treatment must be updated regularly based on surveillance results.
Adolescent
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Adult
;
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Ampicillin/pharmacology
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Anti-Infective Agents/*pharmacology
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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China
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Drug Resistance, Bacterial/drug effects
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Dysentery, Bacillary/*diagnosis/microbiology
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Feces/microbiology
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Humans
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Infant
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Microbial Sensitivity Tests
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Middle Aged
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Nalidixic Acid/pharmacology
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Shigella/*drug effects/isolation & purification
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Shigella flexneri/drug effects/isolation & purification
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Shigella sonnei/drug effects/isolation & purification
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Tetracycline/pharmacology
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Time Factors
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Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole Combination/pharmacology
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Young Adult
5.Experimental study on the antibacterial effect of origanum volatile oil on dysentery bacilli in vivo and in vitro.
Fang LIAO ; Qinghua HUANG ; Zhende YANG ; Hanlin XU ; Qinhua GAO
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2004;24(4):400-403
To observe the germistatic and germicidal effects of origanum volatile oil (OVI) on the dysentery bacteria, the abdominal cavity of mice was infected with Shigella sonne (Sh. sonnei) and Shigella flexneri (Sh. flexneri) F2a. After OVI was given to the mice via gastric lavage, the effects of OVI on the infected mice were observed. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) and minimal bactericidal concentration (MBC) for dysentery bacteria were determined in vitro. The results showed that origanum volatile oil showed obvious protective effect on mice infected with Sh. sonnei and Sh. flexneri F2a and it had germistatic and germicidal effects on dysentry bacteria. We are led to conclude that origanum volatile oil is an effective medicine against the infection of dysentery bacteria.
Animals
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Anti-Bacterial Agents
;
pharmacology
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Dysentery, Bacillary
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microbiology
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Female
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Male
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Mice
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Microbial Sensitivity Tests
;
Oils, Volatile
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pharmacology
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Shigella flexneri
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drug effects
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isolation & purification
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Shigella sonnei
;
drug effects
;
isolation & purification
6.PFGE of Shigella flexneri 4c isolates from food-poisoning outbreaks and sporadic diarrhea patients.
Wei ZHANG ; Jin-Cao PAN ; Dong-Mei MENG ; Rong YE ; Hao-Qiu WANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2007;41(1):50-53
OBJECTIVETo know the molecular characteristic of Shigella flexneri 4c isolates from patients in two food-poisoning outbreaks and one sporadic diarrhea case in Hangzhou, China.
METHODSS. flexneri isolates from patients in two food-poisoning outbreaks (outbreak 1 and outbreak 2, n = 13 and n = 12, respectively) and one sporadic diarrhea patient (n = 1) in Hangzhou during 2003 and 2005 were serotyped. Antibiotic resistances of these isolates were measured by the Kirby-Bauer method. Invasive plasmid antigen gene ipaH was examined by PCR. Pulse field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was performed for molecular typing.
RESULTSIn outbreak 1, all 13 isolates were S. flexneri 4c, of them 6 isolates tested were quite different in PFGE patterns with dice coefficient from 0.78 to 0.92. In outbreak 2, 10 isolates were S. flexneri 4c and 2 isolates were S. flexneri X, however their PFGE patterns were almost identical (dice coefficient > 0.8). Compared to the two outbreaks isolates, the sporadic isolate was demonstrated with a distinct PFGE pattern (dice coefficient < 0.8). The antibiotic resistance patterns with 14 kinds of antibiotics had a little difference among the isolates from outbreak 1, outbreak 2 and sporadic diarrhea patient, but the same pattern was found among 10 isolates of S. flexneri 4c and 2 isolates of S. flexneri X from outbreak 2.
CONCLUSIONSPFGE might distinguish the isolates from these two outbreaks and the sporadic diarrhea patient. Some differences in PFGE patterns, serotypes and antibiotic resistance patterns might occur among S. flexneri 4c isolates during an outbreak.
Bacterial Typing Techniques ; methods ; Diarrhea ; epidemiology ; microbiology ; Disease Outbreaks ; Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field ; Foodborne Diseases ; epidemiology ; microbiology ; Humans ; Microbial Sensitivity Tests ; Shigella flexneri ; classification ; drug effects ; isolation & purification
7.Detection of class I integron and its relation to antimicrobial resistance of Shigella flexneri in children.
Hui YU ; Xiao-hong WANG ; Ying-zi YE ; Jian-chang XUE ; Qi-rong ZHU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2006;44(9):680-683
OBJECTIVETo investigate class I integron of Shigella flexneri, its prevalence in children, and its relation to bacterial resistance to antimicrobial agents.
METHODSTotally 51 strains of Shigella flexneri were isolated from fecal samples of children suffering from bacterial diarrhea seen between June 2004 and November 2004 at Children's Hospital of Fudan University. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was employed to amplify various integron markers, including intI1, gene cassette region and 3' conserved region of class I intrgron; susceptibility of Shigella flexneri strains to 7 antimicrobial agents was determined by K-B (Kriby-Bauer) method.
RESULTSForty-six strains of Shigella flexneri had intI gene with a positive rate of 90.2% (46/51); 24 strains of Shigella flexneri were positive for qacEDelta1-sul1, the positive rate was 47.1% (24/51); proportion of the isolates positive for all the three regions of class I integron was 43.1% (22/51); 46 strains of intI positive Shigella flexneri were all positive for ant (3'')-I. Among 46 strains of intI positive isolates, proportions of the isolates positive and negative for qacEDelta1-sul1 were 47.8% (22/46) and 52.2% (24/46), respectively. In the class I integron positive Shigella flexneri, the resistance rates of ampicillin (chi(2) = 10.13, P < 0.01) and chloramphenicol (chi(2) = 19.97, P < 0.01) were significantly higher than those in the class I integron-negative group.
CONCLUSIONSClass I integron was detected in 90.2% of Shigella flexneri in children; carriage of class I integron is related to antimicrobial resistance of Shigella flexneri.
Anti-Bacterial Agents ; pharmacology ; Child ; DNA, Bacterial ; genetics ; Diarrhea ; microbiology ; Drug Resistance, Bacterial ; genetics ; Dysentery, Bacillary ; drug therapy ; microbiology ; Feces ; microbiology ; Humans ; Integrons ; drug effects ; genetics ; Polymerase Chain Reaction ; Retrospective Studies ; Shigella flexneri ; drug effects ; genetics ; isolation & purification
8.Quinolone-resistant Shigella flexneri Isolated in a Patient Who Travelled to India.
You La JEON ; You Sun NAM ; Gayoung LIM ; Sun Young CHO ; Yun Tae KIM ; Ji Hyun JANG ; Junyoung KIM ; Misun PARK ; Hee Joo LEE
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2012;32(5):366-369
We report a recent case in which ciprofloxacin-resistant Shigella flexneri was isolated from a 23-yr-old female patient with a history of travel to India. Prior to her admission to our internal medicine department, she experienced symptoms of high fever and generalized weakness from continuous watery diarrhea that developed midway during the trip. S. flexneri was isolated from the stool culture. Despite initial treatment with ciprofloxacin, the stool cultures continued to show S. flexneri growth. In the susceptibility test for antibiotics of the quinolone family, the isolate showed resistance to ciprofloxacin (minimum inhibitory concentration [MIC], 8 microg/mL), norfloxacin (MIC, 32 microg/mL), ofloxacin (MIC, 8 microg/mL), nalidixic acid (MIC, 256 microg/mL), and intermediate resistance to levofloxacin (MIC, 4 microg/mL). In molecular studies for quinolone resistance related genes, plasmid borne-quinolone resistance genes such as qnrA, qnrB, qnrS, aac(6')-Ib-cr, qepA, and oqxAB were not detected. Two mutations were observed in gyrA (248C-->T, 259G-->A) and 1 mutation in parC (239G-->T). The molecular characteristics of the isolated S. flexneri showed that the isolate was more similar to the strains isolated from the dysentery outbreak in India than those isolated from Korea.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology
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Bacterial Proteins/genetics/metabolism
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Drug Resistance, Bacterial/drug effects
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Dysentery, Bacillary/microbiology
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Feces/microbiology
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Female
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Humans
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India
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Mutation
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Quinolones/*pharmacology
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Shigella flexneri/drug effects/*isolation & purification/metabolism
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Travel
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Young Adult
9.Microcalorimetric studies of the action on four organic acids in Radix isatidis on the growth of microorganisms.
Weijun KONG ; Yanling ZHAO ; Limei SHAN ; Xiaohe XIAO ; Weiying GUO
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2008;24(4):646-650
The actions of four organic acids in Radix isatidis, a traditional Chinese medicinal (TCM) herb, on Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Shigella dysenteriae growth were investigated by microcalorimetry. The four organic acids were syringic acid, 2-amino-benzoic acid, salicylic acid and benzoic acid. The power-time curves of Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Shigella dysenteriae growth with and without organic acids were acquired, meanwhile the extent and duration of inhibitory effects on the metabolism were evaluated by growth rate constants (k1, k2), maximum heat-output[0] power (P(m)) and peak time (t(m)). The inhibitory activity varied with different drugs. The sequences of anti-microbial activity of the four organic acids on Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Shigella dysenteriae were all: syringic acid > 2-amino-benzoic acid > salicylic acid > benzoic acid. And benzoic acid promoted the growth of Staphylococcus aureus and Shigella dysenteriae. This study provides a basis for the further study on Radix Isatidis.
Anti-Bacterial Agents
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isolation & purification
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pharmacology
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Benzoic Acid
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isolation & purification
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pharmacology
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Calorimetry
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methods
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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chemistry
;
pharmacology
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Escherichia coli
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drug effects
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Gallic Acid
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analogs & derivatives
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isolation & purification
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pharmacology
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Microbial Sensitivity Tests
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Salicylic Acid
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isolation & purification
;
pharmacology
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Shigella dysenteriae
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drug effects
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Staphylococcus aureus
;
drug effects
10.Effect of dexamethasone contamination in drinking water on intestinal flora in mice.
Xi YANG ; Xiao-Yu LI ; Dan SI ; Zhi-Bang YANG ; Zhong-Yuan HE ; Nan-Chen ZHANG ; Shan-Shan ZHANG ; Zhong-Quan SHI
Journal of Southern Medical University 2016;36(2):238-243
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the effect of water pollution with dexamethasone on intestinal flora in mice.
METHODSTwenty Balb/c mice were randomly divided into control group and low-, moderate- and high-dose dexamethasone groups. The mice in dexamethasone groups were exposed to dexamethasone sodium phosphate in drinking water at doses of 0.035, 0.225, and 2.25 ng for 36 days. The changes in behaviors, fur condition, and feces of the mice were observed daily. All the mice were sacrificed at 36 days and the tissues in the ileocecal region was collected for denaturant gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of 16S rDNA V6 variable regions of microbes and sequence analysis with BLAST.
RESULTSThe mice in the 3 dexamethasone groups all showed aggressive behaviors. Cluster analysis of DGGE graph showed relatively stable floras in the ileocecal region in all the mice, but principal component analysis identified differences in the dominating flora among the groups. Diversity analysis of the flora revealed significantly increased amount and types of bacteria in the intestinal flora in all the 3 dexamethasone groups (P<0.05 or 0.01) compared with the control group. Sequence analysis of 16S rDNA V6 regions showed 15 common bacterial species and 2 differential species between the dexamethasone groups and the control group with changes in the type and proportion of the dominating bacterium in the dexamethasone groups. Lactobacillus colonization was detected in the control group but not in moderate- and high-dose dexamethasone groups, and Shigella species were found in the latter two groups.
CONCLUSIONSWater contamination with dexamethasone can affect the nervous system of mice, cause changes in the types and amounts of intestinal bacteria and the dominating bacteria, and inhibit the colonization of probiotics in the intestinal floras to increase the risk of invasion by intestinal pathogenic bacteria.
Animals ; Bacteria ; classification ; Dexamethasone ; pharmacology ; Drinking Water ; chemistry ; Feces ; Gastrointestinal Microbiome ; drug effects ; Lactobacillus ; isolation & purification ; Mice ; Mice, Inbred BALB C ; Probiotics ; RNA, Bacterial ; genetics ; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ; genetics ; Shigella ; isolation & purification